The Huntingdon Journal. J R. DURBORROW, HUNTINGDON, PENN'A Wednesday Morning, Oct. 21, 1874. Circulation LARGER than any other Paper in the Juniata Valley. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS Supreme Judge, Edward M. Paxson, of Philadelphia Lieutenant Governor, Arthur G. Olmsted, of Potter. Secretary of Internal Affairs, Robert B. Beath, of Schuylkill Auditor General, arriBoll Allen, of Warren Congress, Gen. Langhorne Wister, of Perry Senate, Col. Theodore McGowan, of Franklin co., Assembly, George Guyer, of Warriorsmark, Henry C• Robinson, of Dublin. Sheriff, Huston E. Crum, of Tod. County Commissioner, William E. Corbin, of Juniata. Director of the Poor, Jacob H. Isett, of Penn. County Surveyor, William H. Booth, of Springfield Auditor, Henry H. Swope, of Mapleton. MASS MEETING. The Republicans of the "Lower Ead" will convene in Mass Meeting, at . SCOTTSVILLE, On FRIDAY EVENING, Oct. 23, '74, at 7 o'clock. Republicans, arouse ! Make tbis the grandest meeting of the campaign. Hon. John Scott, and others, will address you. L. S. GEISSINGEIt, Chairman Rep. Co., Co, MONEY WANTED. Court is approaching and we are com pelled to remind those in arrears for sub scriptions, advertising and job work, that we need money badly and we earnestly hope that they will not permit Court to pass by without paying up. There is not a man in the county who owes us, but can bring us the money or send it in with soma one coming to Court. Times are just as hard with ns as with everlrody else, and we must have money to pay for labor and materials. It don't make any difference how short we are, our bands expect to be paid promptly, and if' we fail they growl until we wish that every one indebted to us could hear what ill nature their de linquency creates. Pay up ! Your bills are small and can be readily met. The aggregated small bills enable us to pay our. large and constantly maturing ones. We don't want to owe anybody, and if our de linquents will pay up we will soon wipe out all our indebtedness and go on our way rejoicing. Don't fail to pay up and give us a chance to rejoice. tf. Da. Our correspondent at Chattanooga informs us that the Convention was largly attended and a decided success. mt. "Old Demotrat" cuts great gaps through the ranks of the Fusionists at erery sweep. Read his rejoinder. lei. Hon. Wm. P. Schell bas been nominated for Senator by the Democrats of the Bedford District. He is an excel lent man. He will run a large vote at home. may,"An Old Democrat" appears to be a fearthl thorn in the side of the Fusion• isle. The fact is Democrats hearkr, to his wards of wisdom and catch up his in spiration with enthusiasm, and as a conse quence the days of the Fu3ionists are num bered. You bet ! mar If Doctor McNite will get drunk and make a beast of himself in the face of his constituents, when soliciting votes, what would he do at Harrisburg ? Tem perance men, how can you vote for such a man f He is the right kind of a man for the Liquor League, and it is working like a bearer to elect him. stir Thomas K. Henderson, Esq., the Fusion Democratic candidate for Sheriff, during the war was not in sympathy with the Union cause. We are informed that when Lieutenant Lytle, the bravest of the brave, went to arrest a deserter the aforesaid Thomas K. interfered to prevent his arrest. Now he asks Union men to elect him to the office of High Sheriff. Will you do it? At least five hundred Democrats in the county respond emphat ically that they will not. sir The Globe can't support Stenger, the Democratic candidate for Congress, openly, because that would not be agreea ble to Speer, and it don't want to support Wister because he was nominated by the regular Republican Conferees, including those from this county; therefore it tries to make Geo. Wister believe that the men who nominated him, as the representative of this district, are opposing him, and his only friends in this county are the men who are opposing every man on the ticket with him. That is a little thin, but if the Gass squad will vote for Wister, as they say, we will give them due credit, and we are perfectly willing to leave it to Gen. Wister to find out where the votes come from that elect him. NIL. Since our last we are told that Dr. MeNits admits that he was drunk at New port. Now, then, voters of Huntingdon eonnty, do you think of sending a man to Harrisburg to legislate fur you who, when he goes abroad, will get so beastly drunk that-he will sit down to a table and take out "mashed" potatoes with his hands and use WS ingers for all the purposes that other people usually use spoons and knives , and then afterwards sit around the hotel, an object for scores of flies, - until some good Samaritan carries him off to bed ? It strike" us ,hat that is not the sort of a man Jon, want at : Harrisburg. Doctor Mahe admits he was drunk and we have been told, by—at least three parties, that , thia:*lis eondnct while drunk. He l ltb c tdd" Opresent Huntingdon county witli'digialty, wouldn't be ? To those Republicans who have stood by the party in years gone by, and who now contemplate desertion to the enemy, we Wish to address a few calm, serious words of caution and admonition. Some of you have been soldiers, all of you have had friends in the army, and now the old ques tions, which you thought had been fought out in 1861 and 1865, are again demand ing attention. "Scotched, but not killed," rebellion has already attempted to over throw the loyal governments in Arkansas and Louisiana, and only awaits the assu rance of Northern aid to fan into a flame the fires still smouldering in Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina. What po sition do you propose taking on the old question ? Are you ready to abandon the princi ples for which you have struggled and join that party whose principles are so at vari ance with your own, in whose defeat you have so often triumphed and with whom you arc not and never can be in sympathy ? Your organization has been gradually drifting away from the Republican party; outside of the county it is not recognized as even a wing or faction of the party, it sent Conferees neither to the Republican Congressional nor Senatorial Conference, and it did not even claim representation in the Convention which recently sat at Harrisburg. What stronger evidence can you ask, of the point to which your or• ionization is drifting, than the fact that its acknowledged leaders took more inter est in the Democratic than the Republican nomination for Congress, and used all their efforts to further the nomination of Mr. Speer As an organization you have pre tended to be independent of both parties, how long, think you, such independence will continue after the present alliance and the community of interest has been estab lished between it and the Democratic party ? You who expect this fall to sun der all connection with the Republican party of Huntingdon county, should look before you leap. You should pause and consider all that is involved in thus fight ing the Republican ticket from behind the ramparts of the enemy. Your numbers have been depleted year by year ; you have not by several hundreds the force with which you started in 1870, and by the 2d of November many snore of you will have re-affirmed your adherence to the old party by coming out openly and squarely for the ticket. Perhaps by next year, when your feeble remnant is absorbed in the Democratic party, it will be too late for you to regain your old position, and certainly you will not expect to be re ceived with the same cordiality and confi• dence as now. - - EDITOR Behind you arc the traditions, the tri umphs, the glories, the history of the Republican party and all that has for years wade it the party of your choice; before you, like a narrow stream of separa tion, is the fusion and alliance concocted by the disappointed aspirants of both par ties, and beyond lies the Democratic party, tempting you to barter away life-long principles for the hope of office and the pleasure of serving as instruments of ven geance in the hands of your leaders. Pause on the brink and consider care fully before you cross this stream ! NEW COUNTY. In answer to the fabulous charge of the Globe of last week, that Mr. Guyer is in favor of the erection of a new county with Tyrone as the county seat, we herewith publish an extract of a letter, to L. S. Geiainger, esq., Chairman of the Repub lican County Committee, from Rev. Geo. Guyer. All of the letter cannot be pub lished on account of private matters there in contained. The extract is as following : "There is a report in circulation that I am " in favor of a new county, to be compossed "of parts of Huntingdon and Blair. We in " this end of the county would almost unani " m,ously oppose any such measure. Nor would " 1 as the representative of the people feel my " self at liberty to advocate such a measure or to " introduce it, unless a majority of the citizen " voters of the county should request it by " their petition to the Legislature. " Respectfully, Yours, "GEORGE GUYER." Dated at Tyrone, Pa., October 10, 1874. ANOTHER DOSE FOR GUSS. The Hon. Francis D. Collins, one of the Democratic Senators who signed the majority report of the Cassville Investiga ting Committee, ousting A. L. Guss, has been • nominated by the Democracy for Congress in the Eleventh District. This district has about six thousand Democratic majority, but as the new Constitution may prevent fraud in the famous 12th Ward of Scranton, there is a slight chance that he may be defeated if Guss will only make a vigurous attack on him. What with Beath, and Blair, %oil Guyer, and Collins and the others on i.ie hands, Guss seems to have a hard time in the re form movement. Els_ At last the League Republicans and the Speer Democrats have come to gether. We told our readers, time and again, that the Leaguers were drifting to wards the Democrats, and at last, as usual, our words have been verified. Men who have grown gray in the Republican party, are you willing to allow yourselves to be led into the camp of your life long antag onists ? After a life spent in battling for what you have contended was right now in the closing hours are you willing to give the lie to all past efforts ? Think befbre you leap ! If you attempt it you will go to the bottom to rise no mere. n 0... The Fusionists are extremely active and it behooves those opposed to Fusion to be up and doing. Republicans and anti fusion Democrats, go to work or the coon. ty will be handed over to the Leaguers, and you will have Porter and Union town ships and the Poor House repeated on a large scale. If you want to save taxes vote against Fusion. I sec my name in the Huntingdon Globe, as one of the County Committee, of the Woods and Guss faction. Now I want it distinctly understood it was done without my knowledge or consent, as I do not be long to, or have any sympathy with that breed of cats. EPHRAIM BOWMAN CASS TWP , Oct. Bth, 1874. PAUSE! CARD. GEORGE GUYER AND THE NEW COUNTY. The Globe and JOURNAL, of last week, refer to the dream once entertained by the people of Tyrone, that a new county SA , ould be formed out of portions of Huntingdon, Blair and Centre with their "city" as the county seat. On the one hand, it is as serted that Geo. Guyer is "amongst the prominent agitators of this movement in this county," and on the other, this is denounced as a "pure fabrication, without any foundation in fact." The project may be a matter of some interest to the people of the three counties mentioned, and for this reason I desire to paint out its absur dity. Mr. Guyer's views in regard to it not being of any importance, as his posi tion in the Legislature, if elected, will not give him the slightest influence or control over it, and therefore the question should not determine one vote fur or against him. In the first place, no law can be passed by the General Assembly for the forma tion of the new county. The section of the new Constitution placing a limitation upon local and special legislation (Section 7, Article III) prohibits, among other things, the passage of any law "locating or changing county seats, erecting new coun tin or changing county lines." - - But it may be said that Mr. Guyer may have some power or influence over the matter, if elected, even if it cannot be done by act of the Legislature. In answer to this I will quote Section 1, Article XIII of the new Constitution : "No new county shall be established which than reduce any county to less than four bun • dred square miles, or to less than twenty thousand inhabitants; nor shall any county be formed of less area, or containing a less popu lation ; nor shall any line thereof pass within ten miles of the county seat of any county proposed to be divided." These restrictions make the proposed new county an impossibility. To get an area of four hundred square miles from the three counties named, surrounding Tyrone, without encroaching within ten miles of lluntingdon, Hollidaysburg or Bellefonte is a geographical difficulty which I believe to be insurmountable. And this area, if obtained, would not contain the required population—twenty thousand.— The following are the townships and num ber of inhabitants proposed to be taken from Huntingdon and Blair counties : Franklin Morris Warriorsmark - 3252 .......... 1893 Antis Snyder Tyrone Tyrone Borough lB4O - - ___ Catharine Total All of the townships above mentioned as to be taken from Blair county could not be included in the new county, as Blair would be left with less than four hundred square miles of territory, and a part of Tyrone township extends within five or six miles of Hollidaysburg and this portion would have to be excluded. It would therefore be necessary to obtain over ten thousand inhabitants from Centre county, and, in order to remain the prescribed dis tance from Bellefonte, without going more than ten miles North of the boundary of Blair county. Before this can be accom plished, Centre most increase her popula tion considerably by immigration or oth erwise. At what period of time in the fu. ture a population of twenty thousand can be obtained within a radius of ten. or twelve miles from Tyrone, is an uncertain ty. It is a fact, and a remarkable one, that from 1860 to 1870 there was a do. crease in the population of Franklin town ship of one hundred and ninetyaix, of Morris township one hundred and eleven, and of Warriorsmark township one hun dred and thirty-two. There was also a decrease of popu,lation in Antis, Snyder and Tyrone townships, Blair county. Mr. Guyer will have retired from public life many years before COUNTY TYRONE comes into existence. MILTON S. LYTLE. Oct. 19, 1874. THE OLD STORY. There was sonic prospect that the De mocratic papers and leaders would add something to the capital and stock in trade of their party, but they have dwindled down to the original capital on which they have run it for twelve years past, to wit : Prejudice against the negro. There seems to be no other ground on which they can agree or stand for a moment. "Press home the nigger and the taxes," said Wallace in his circular letter as Chairman of the Democratic State Committee, five years ago. "Let us. go in strong on the Civil Rights bill, and corruptions in Congress," say the Deniocratic orators and writers of to-day. In this line of argument they appeal not to the intelligent portion of their party, but to the ignorant and prejudiced. They have always, underestimated the intelli gence of their own party, and acted on the presumption that appeals to blind, unrea soning prejudice were the only arguments that could reach its masses. It stands to the credit of the country that they have always failed heretofore in this line of policy, and there is every reason to hope they will fail again, though the leaders on that side seem determined to run the pre sent campaign in that channel, even though it leads to ruin. )2eL. So Guss doesn't like Gon. Beath's recent visit to Huntingdon. Well, wo didn't think he would. Beath don't seem to scare worth a cent, notwitLstanding the bluster or the Globe. When bore he showed us a letter received from a soldier who bad read the article against him from the Globe saying, "Every soldier in this county is your friend, and I know of none that will oppose your election, be lie De mocrat or Republican." He bad also a letter from a hard working Democrat, in this region, giving him assurance of a number of Democratic votes on account of the virulent abuse of the Globe, and we believe there are hundreds of decent De mocrats who will take this opportunity of voting for Beath to show how thoroughly they despise Guss. igt. From and after next week we will be able to give our readers the usual amount of local matter. Polities take up all our apace at present. "AN OLD DEMOCRAT" TO THE FRONT. 13ARREE TOWNSHIP, Oct. 19, '74, EDITOR JOURNAL—Dear Sir : —My letter, published in the JOURNAL of the ith inst., appears to have created as much consternation among the fusionists as a clap of thunder from a clear sky. The last Monitor doles out a column and a half of editorial in its efforts to place tne at a dis advantage, and to prove that I am a myth or a fraud, or both, while "A True Demo crat"—milk and water Democrat would have been an improvement—undertake s a similar task in the Globe. I have not the time, and I suppose you have not the space to spare, to go into an extended re ply. I desire to be as brief as possible. My advice to the Democrats was given under a conviction of duty and in good faith. It is true that I have not appeared over my own signature, but the Democrats whom I represent do not ask this of me, and I ant under no obligations to any one else, save my publisher, and he knows what he is about. But I certainly ought to have accorded to me the same privileges in addressing my fellow Democrats that arc accorded to those who assail me. Sure ly I ought to have as much right to ad dress my follow citizens over an anonymous signature as Mr. Speer and others have, without any signature whatever, through the editorial columns of the Monitor. I am reminded, however, that I could have reached the Democratic ear much better through the columns of the Monitor than through the JOURNAL. Do you re member that beautiful little poem coin tneneing with "Will you walk into my parlor?" II you do, you will also remember that the "silly little fly never NEVER came out again." I hope I will not be misunderstood. The "thin" proposition to prove that I am a myth tempts me. I will also make a proposition—one that means some thing. Tho town of Huntingdon has no public Library, and doubtless such an in stitution would be a great advantage to the Monitor office, if not, I know, at least, that the town needs one very badly. Now I will obligate myself to pay to Hon. Jno. M. Bailey, J. H. Durborrow, esq., and Graffus Miller, csq., of your town, or any other three honorable men, ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS for the object stated, if I was not born and raised, and voted a straight Democratic ticket, for twenty years, in Barree township, if the Monitor people will, on the other hand, obligate them selves to pay a similar amount to the same creditable object, in case I make good my proposition. Now here is something worth looking after. .It is a fair proposition. If I fail to show that the communications, over the signa ture of "An Old Democrat," do emanate from me, a native of Barree township, and a voter of a straight Democratic ticket for twenty years, then I will pay the gentle meu named ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS for the object stated, and on the other hand, if I do make good my proposition, then they are to pay a similar amount. Put up your forfeit, gentlemen, so that there can be no after-claps or backing down, and the gentlemen named will answer for me. Put up your money--the burden of proof, as the lawyers say, is upon me. I hope you, who are so anxious to deny the existence of "An Old Democrat," will not hesitate. If you should fail, you know, the money will go to a good cause. Take the risk and you will be made happy in ending out who "An Old Democrat" is. 1355 688 1209 1006 ..... 907 7058 10,310 I thought I had been sufficiently expli cit in regard to the fusion ticket. If not, I will say again that I am opposed to any thing that countenances fusion, therefore, I am opposed to Thomas K. Henderson and every other man on the fusion ticket. If the few Democrats who are on it had set themselves against fusion, there would have been a straight ticket, and for this I hold them responsible. If the Woods men were sincere in their desire to defeat the Regular Republicans, they would not hesitate to vote for any person placed in nomination by the Democrats. I deny that I advised Democrats to vote for Gen. Beath. I simply suggested that he deserved to be complimented for the part he took in breaking up the wretched state of affairs at Cassville. I shall vote the Democratic State ticket from top to bottom. The Monitor asks very pointedly what claims has Mr. Scott upon the Democratic party that Democrats should vote for his candidates for Legislature. Permit me, Yankee like, to answer the question by asking another. What claims had Mr. Speer upon the Republican party that members of it twice voted for him, there by electing him to Congress and defeating their candidate ? Certainly Mr. Scott never boasted that he run both the Demo cratic and Republican parties, and never used corrupt means to secure Democratic nominations in his interest. If lam not misinformed Mr. Speer expected to secure his election a third time, if he had been nominated, through Republican votes, and this in the face of the fact that he has la bored for years to ruin the Republican party. Democrats, Hon. John Scott has met you fairly, squarely, honorably ! He has never gone out of his way to corrupt the corruptible within your ranks. He never schemed and plotted your destruc tion in secret conclave, under cover of darknes . He is too honorable for that ! And we should honor him for his integrity and uprightness. Fusion has been brought about to ena ble the Woods men to vent their personal spleen upon this gentleman. What, I ask, have Democrats to gain by becoming parties to such littleness ? Why should they further the spiteful projects of a few soreheads ? Has the great Democratic party got down to this ? Shades of Jef ferson and Jackson turn aside and weep There was a day when the Democracy of Huntingdon county would have immo lated the man who would have even sug gested such a course. Yours, Most Respectfully, • AN OLD DEMOCRAT. as. We had the pleasure ofa visit, from our friend, Conrad, of the McVeytown Journal, one day last week. Ho is a good fellow. Call again when you come this way. THE LATE ELECTIONS. The October elections have been quite disastrous to the Itvublican party in Ohio, Indiana, West Vir g inia, and several of the Southern States. They have been much more favorable to the Democrats than the most sanguine leaders of that party ex pected. It is the usual recoil after a Pres idential campaign. The next Congress will he More evenly divided and the Dem ocratic party will have an opportunity to develop something more than mere opposi tion. It will have to do this if it wants to succeed in 187 G. There were many causes that have led to tins defeat, which has not come an hour too soon, but we do not desire to enumer ate them. The Republican party will now proceed to put its 113usc in order, and we appeal to the Republicans of Hun tingdon county to go to work at once and see that every vote will he brought out to save us from the fate of our Weitern brethren. Go to work and work day and night from this until the election. em. The farmers of Huntingdon coun ty have been very anxious to try a new order of things at the Poor House, and to bring this about they must elect Jacob H. Isett, esq. The election of Aaron Evans, esq would place the institution for another year in the hands of those who have been running it fur a number of years. Evans is one of the molt complete tools of 011A8 and Woods in the county, and, to be can did, all are astonished at it, because he is a man of intelligence. It will be remem bered that he was induced by Guss to as sist him in hushing up the scandals that were started from time to time. His last effort of this kind was the case of a lady at Spruce Creek. A man who will allow himself to be used in this manner no wan can trust. Tax-payers, how can you en trust affairs of so much importance to him? The League men only want the county of fices to fleece the tax-payers and it looks to ua as if' Evans could do their bidding effectually. esit„. The Guss Republican County Com mittee of Huntingdon county, at a meet ing on the 9th inst., resolved to support, in addition to their own, the Democratic county ticket. Our readers will remember that the Guss party and the Democracy each nominated part of a ticket, each na ming a candidate for Assembly and, by previous agreement, dividing the minor nominations. Now, the Guss party have formally ratified the Democratic half, and we presume the Democracy will recipro cate. The arrangement, so far as made public, embraces only the county nomina tions. The Democratic Senatorial candi date is Chambers McKibben, of Franklin and as there is no other candidate to pit against him, it is possible that the Gnashes will insist as a return for supporting him, a reasonable equivalent in cash. They bad better secure it before the election, as the signs are that the joint stock concern will be in hopeless political bankruptcy on the evening of the 3rd of November.— Blair County Radical. :el_ We understand John 8. Miller has been through the upper end of the county urging, and even threatening, Democrats to support the fusion ticket. That cer• tainly requires a good deal of cheek from a man who himself refused to support the fusion ticket of 18G9, and labored to de feat it. But we suppose men like Miller and Speer, who think they carry the De mocratic party in their pockets, have a right to do as they please, and the rank and file arc only hewers of wood and draw ers of water for them, and must obey or ders. Democrats have a first-rate oppor tunity either to show their self respect and independence or to cat dirt for nothing We will see what we will see. mg,. Doctor MeNite says that he did wear a Copperhead badge during the re bellion and that if he had not lost it he would still be wearing it. low can any man who sympathized with the Union du ring the days of peril and blood honor a man of this kind by sending him to the Legislature ? Soldiers:and patriots, flatten out the Copperhead ! Sar It is said that Doctor McNite claims that he assisted wonderfully in se curing the East Broad Top Railroad. The people down along the line of it say that be was prominent in selling liquor to the hands employed in grading it. Perhaps the Doctor's efforts were not appreciated. is. "A True Democrat" in the last Globe talks about "heavily leaded" arti cles. This is a technical term among print ers. The ear-marks tell. If the word "Democrat" were stricken out in the sig nature and "Fraud" inserted it, would read right and tell the naked truth. EDITOR JOURNAL :—As the day of election is fast approaching and many can didates are before the public, it behooves us to consider well, in these days of panic and prostration, the character and moral fitness of the persons asking the suffrages of the people. It is with surprise that we see the name of A. W. Evans, of Cassville, for Director of the Poor, an office to be filled by some responsible, honest, common sense man. We here emphatically say that Mr. Fvans cannot be supported here until he makes plain and satisfies Mr. David Roland in regard to his local bounty, and the public also that he did not de fraud him. It is a well known fact to many citizens of Cass township that A. W. Evans accompanied David Roland to Har risburg, where he (Mr. R.) enlisted for the war and received four hundred dollars. Three hundred and ninety he placed in Mr. Evans' hands to give to his father at home for safe keeping, until he returned from the war. This Mr. Evans failed to do. He kept it until he returned, and one year thereafter, at the solicitation of Mr. Roland and friends, he gave his personal obligation, which Roland got cashed, at the instance of Evans, at a discount of one hundred and fifty dollars. Tax-payers, this is the moral fitness of the man who wants (we say wants—for it is well known here that he has been aspiring to this position for a period of ten years,) to direct the Poor, or the money rather. We earnestly appeal to the comrades of David Roland, who breasted the cannon and bayonet, on many a hard-fought battle field of the late rebellion, to remember the man who took advantage of a comrade. Mr. Evans is respectfully requested to clear this matter up satisfzaory to the public and the one who is the sufferer. CITIZENS. Cass township, Oct. 17, 1874. Address of the Republican State Com- mittee. To TILE REPURLICINI You arc called upon “iI , C more to nemee a stand in defence of your principles. The party which, by its political hereeire, phingeit this country into a bloody war. stand, arrayed against you on precisely the ground.; which it occupied in 1840, and proposal to re-open all the old centrovers es which it was than,Cht had been settled by the ear, nail it therefor! becomes necessary to sustain at the polle the governmental policy which has prey - Alai ma der a Republican administration. "An undefiled and restored Constitution." which is equivalent to the Southern demand for "the Constitution as it was," is what the Democracy of Pennsylvania asks for in the recently issued address of its State Commit tee. It wants to ignore or rule out the thir teenth, fourteenth and fifteenth amend - Dents to the Constitution, and restore the Constitu tion as it stood before the war. It !mete np pretence that those amendments are null and void, and if it should return to power we may naturally look for an attempt to enforce a re lapse to the condition of things that existed prior to the Rebellion. The recent armed npriaing in the South, se companied by numerous murders. outrages innumerable. open rebellion, and the estab lishment of a reign of terror to intimidate the unarmed and peaceful eitisens, bad the full sanction and sympathy of the Northern De mocracy, and were plainly but part of a gen. eral plan to re establish the old orJer of things. The part of the Northeea Democracy is to lull the people into a false security, and steal back into place upon false pretences, if possi ble. The part of the Southern Denim-racy is to set up a reign of violence, and by such an intimidation of the weak as will keep *bees from the polls, to instal themselves into elites to which they could never otherwise attain. The two work together in perfect bermes'''. and their joint triumph would utterly annihi late all the beneficial results of the war. it is the part of the Republicans of Pennsyl vania to crush this conspiracy by thomughly defeating those engagel in it, and they can do this only by rallying heartily to the support of their State ticket, and by cordially sup porting their local nominations, so as to se cure the election of a large majority of the Congressmen and a decisive mejnrity in the Legislature. The people of Pennsylvania do not want to return to "a restored Constitution, - or "the Constitution as it was." They do not want to come hack again under the insolent rule of the Southern oligarchy, or to put their varied and grand indnstrial interests at the mercy of the free trade demagogues who control the Democratic party. But, strong as are their convictions upon this subject, they can enforce them only is one way, and that is at the polls. They must elect men in harmony with their well snows views and interests ; and this can be dime only by securing a thorangh defeat of the Democratic party. The last Democratic State Convention did not dare to open its month in favor of protec tion to American Industry. or against the rat ification of the Reciprocity Treaty, which is free trade in disguise. It had not the courage to take sides with time party is uther Stater on those questions, and was equally cowardly in declining to take the other side. On the two great questions which involve the mate rial interests of the State. the prosperity of its people, and the development of its wealth, it was as silent as the grave. No one doubts that its sympathies are with the enemies of our material progress, and the rule is as good in this case as in every other—Ale that is set for us is against us." If, therefore, the people of Pennsylvania want to defend and promote the growth sad prosperity of their State, they will lot entrust its destinies to ibe hands of a party that dare not open its lips in their favor. The Democratic party of the nation is tor free trade, and the outspoken part of it is in favor of repudiation; and it is for the people of Pennsylvania to decide whether they will again permit such a party to control, and by controlling to ruin, their future prospects. The Republican party of the State bee had possession of the Government since MI, and has proved in that time its claim to continued public confidence. It bas administered the government honestly, faithfully, economically, and justly. The State hoc grown with rapid strides nuder its fostering care ; the laws are everywhere judiciously enforced ; and it seeds but the maintainance of the protective policy on the part of the National Government, to secure our advance, at an early day, into the front rank of all the States. When the Republicans assumed the reins of the State Government in 1961, they found State debt of over $40.000,000, and the break ing out of the Rebellion entailed an immediate addition to that debt of $3,500,000 for arming the people and defending the Slate, so that they began their administration with the bur den of over $43,000,000 of debt. That debt bas now been reinced t 0514,000.000. a redac tion in round numbers of $19,000,000 is thir teen years, or nearly $1,500,000 yearly. Mim i reduction has been accomplished by econeeril and honesty in the administration of as 'lances, and not by taxation. The Stale Ins on real estate was repealed in 1564, and that on personal estate in 1573, so that while the State is free from direct taxation it is still tepidly and steadly extinguishing its debt. This is a handsome record to present. 244 is a complete answer to all the ridicules! charges that bare been trumped up of corrupt ness and extravagance. The State has never been better or more honestly managed nadir any administration, and we point to this rec ord with pride in the contrast it presents to the policy which, during the rule of the Des ocrats, inflicted upon the State a debt of $4O, 000,000, accompanied with a heavy bitrien of direct taxation. We desiro to remind our Republican friends that the Legislature to be chosen this fall will hare in its hands the election of a United States Senator for six years. It is of the ut most importance, therefore, that, ignoring all causes of local distraction, they should unite actively, firmly, and harmoniously in behalf of their local candidates for the Legislature throughout the State. Every Democrat elected to the Legislature in Republican counties on a local issue, will vote only for a Democrat for United States Senator, and no true Korth lican will, by his vote, render such a result possible. We also entreat our friends to pay no bend to the attempt to delude them into the belief that the Republican party is opposed to the new Constitution. It was a Republican State Convention which first demanded a revision of the old Constitution so as to secure the sup pression ofapecial legislation ; it was a Repub lican Legislature which called the Constitu tional Convention ; the Constitutional Cnnveu Lion was itself Republican ; it was tbe Repub lican vote of the State which secured the adop Lion of the new Constitution ' • and it was a Republican Legislature which framed the lag islation necessary to carry its provisions into effect. The party record is too clean upon all these points to be questioned or doubted. The business depression which has :alien upon the country in the past year has been blamed upon the Government and as the effect of ftepublicen policy ; but as the same depres sion was prevalent throughout Europe, it is clear that it must be due to other causes. The country is already rapidly recovering from its effects, a result which when panics occurred heretofore, required several years to accom plish ; and as the only remedy which Demo cTs c y offers is free trade and a return to the destructive policy which produced the ruinous revulaions of 1837 and 1857, the people will find it much safer to trust to the policy under which the country is now recuperating, than to fall back upon the exploded one that pre vailed under Democratic rule. _ _ _ We earnestly urge upon our friends through out the Commonwealth to wake up to the real importance of the pending election. and by energetic work to render certain a Republican victory. Such a victory is not to be woe by supineness, and folding the hands in careless neglect of the great issues at stake. Victory. if won, must be sought and not waited for.— Active, energetic, unflagging effort is essential to assurred success. It is not in the power of the Democracy to carry this State of themselves, but carelessness and neglect en our part may aid them. Organisation, work, and the cultivation of a spirit of coseiliatiou and harmony where local differences have prevailed, will accom plish much ; and we appeal to the Repubficaus of the state, as they love their cherished prin ciples, as they are deveted to the promotion of the material interests of the Commonwealth, as they value the preservation of the peace of the Union and its perpetuity, as they desire the permanent establishment of the protective policy, as they value bounty, integrity and fidelity in their public servants, to put on a fresh seal for their sacred and righteous cause. to renew their hearty devotion to their princi ples and the welfz.re of the country, and by a strong and determined rally at the polls, to crush out at once the hopes of those who would light again the fires of rebelling" at the South, and the purpose to co-operate with' ' them which itainistes their Democratic coad jutors at the North. By order of Republican State Constaittee- BrSettLi Rum, Chalons*. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers